The fastest recorded ball was turned down to fine leg for a non-descript single. Just shows that being quickest doesn't necessarily help a bowler, so why strive for it?Suit yourself...stick your head in the sand!
We had Akhtar break the 100 mile barrier and Tait come really close, but still there are people who claim Larwood etc were faster.....if you take an Akthar bouncer flush in the face without a helmet, it would probably be the end of a career...one would require a miracle to stay alive after a head injury at that pace. I'm fairly certain we will have someone who will eclipse the likes of Akhtar in the next 10 years...
Lee has been clocked at 159kmh, what is the highest speed has Steyn been clocked.I've watched cricket for 40 years as I said. Currently Steyn is about as quick as Lee was, who was about as quick as Donald, who was about as quick as Waqar, who was about as quick as Holding, who was about as quick as Thommo etc.
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well his theory does seem to be correct to some extent. these days we have so many fast bowlers who can bowl around 150 kph. even if you go back 10 years, we only had few (akhtar, lee, tait,anyone else???) who could bowl at 150 kph.The fastest recorded ball was turned down to fine leg for a non-descript single. Just shows that being quickest doesn't necessarily help a bowler, so why strive for it?
And that ball was bowled, what over ten years ago? So what's happened? According to your theory lots of bowlers should be bowling quicker than Shoaib bowled...
I've watched cricket for 40 years as I said. Currently Steyn is about as quick as Lee was, who was about as quick as Donald, who was about as quick as Waqar, who was about as quick as Holding, who was about as quick as Thommo etc.
Being the quickest runner gets you lots of rewards. Being the quickest bowler not so much. When you can be as good as McGrath, Wasim, Ambrose, Pollock, Hadlee etc back to Bedser, and good old Sid Barnes why bother trying to be the new Sean Tait?.
Ok, so Thommo circa 1975 was quicker than Holding circa 1980? Ok, I'll believe that. Reverse evolution that kind of proves my point.Lee has been clocked at 159kmh, what is the highest speed has Steyn been clocked.
Holding as fast as Thommo, errr no, not ever.
My "wild theory" is that sprinters try to be the quickest sprinters but bowlers try to be the best bowlers rather than the quickest. I agree, I live on the edge...Beating a batsman for pace feels as satisfactory as hitting a six...Don't tell me there is no motivation to bowl quicker through the air.
No quick bowler is every likely to topple Muralitharan's wicket record...why bother with quick bowling at all, lets all bowl spin!
You sure come up with some wild theories mate...
By that logic, every batsman should strive to hit sixes all the time...Beating a batsman for pace feels as satisfactory as hitting a six...Don't tell me there is no motivation to bowl quicker through the air.
No quick bowler is every likely to topple Muralitharan's wicket record...why bother with quick bowling at all, lets all bowl spin!
You sure come up with some wild theories mate...
By that logic, every batsman should strive to hit sixes all the time...
Well I can't think of anyone currently who consistently bowls 150+. There are a few in the mid to high 140's who may occasionally get to 150.well his theory does seem to be correct to some extent. these days we have so many fast bowlers who can bowl around 150 kph. even if you go back 10 years, we only had few (akhtar, lee, tait,anyone else???) who could bowl at 150 kph.
You're kidding, right?This is so obviously true, and yet people who claim to be knowledgeable about the game will still dispute it. Cricket is surely the only sport where fans will say with a straight face that players from "the old days" would beat current players and not get ridiculed. It's the weirdest thing.
Well, we did have so many bowlers,maybe better bowlers than we have today, but there is no reliable evidence that can show that those bowlers were faster than bowlers we have today. the only evidence is footage, which is underwhelming.Well I can't think of anyone currently who consistently bowls 150+. There are a few in the mid to high 140's who may occasionally get to 150.
Maybe 10 years ago not. But go back 35 years and you'd have had Lillee, Thomson, Pascoe, Hogg, Hurst, Roberts, Holding, Daniel, Croft, Willis, Imran, Hadlee, Procter, Rice (?) who all looked pretty quick even if we don't have speed gun records to confirm or deny it.
I can appreciate that the comparison of speed across generations is a difficult one.Well, we did have so many bowlers,maybe better bowlers than we have today, but there is no reliable evidence that can show that those bowlers were faster than bowlers we have today. the only evidence is footage, which is underwhelming.
I am not a technological expert. But in those raw footage bowlers from old era do look slower than the bowlers we have today, except a few...I can appreciate that the comparison of speed across generations is a difficult one.
But I don't really understand why we can't get a bit closer by examining old footage. We know the length of the pitch, and we know the frames-per-second of the film.
I'm assuming there is a flaw in this simplistic suggestion, which I suspect might have something to do with margins of error, but would appreciate an explanation from someone who understands where my reasoning falls apart
This is very true. Some, Ken Farnes and Ernie McCormick in particular, look positively pedestrian in the old footage I've seen, and even Fiery Fred doesn't look particularly sharp. So I always thought perhaps it was just the effect of the black and white footage. And then you have a look at the footage of Larwood bowling in 32/33, and he looks so ****ing quick in that, or perhaps I'm just biased ..................I am not a technological expert. But in those raw footage bowlers from old era do look slower than the bowlers we have today, except a few...
Way ahead of ya.
You can, very easily. Download clips from youtube, chuck them in a video editing tool, and then count the frames from ball release to when it hits/passes the stumps. If you know the framerate, then you can use this to calculate the average speed of the ball during its 20-metre journey. Just did it for Trueman, he comes out consistently around the 130kph range. Taking into account that speed guns today measure the balls speed immediately after release, you should add about 10 or so kph to this result, which puts Trueman in the early 140s. Sounds about right to me. Obviously, it's a technique which will only give you rough ballpark figures for a bowler's general pace, not precise ball-to-ball readings.I can appreciate that the comparison of speed across generations is a difficult one.
But I don't really understand why we can't get a bit closer by examining old footage. We know the length of the pitch, and we know the frames-per-second of the film.
I'm assuming there is a flaw in this simplistic suggestion, which I suspect might have something to do with margins of error, but would appreciate an explanation from someone who understands where my reasoning falls apart